The Greater Vancouver Real Estate Board reported a 52.5 per cent jump in sales on the Multiple Listing Service in August, 2013, compared to August, 2012. Total sales in August amounted to 2,514.

(The Board noted the month was still 4.6 per cent below August’s 10-year average.)

Sales in July were even higher, hitting 2,946 (14.7 per cent higher than August’s).

Housing prices in Vancouver dropped 1.3 per cent from August, 2012, although they’re up 2.3 per cent from January 1, 2013.

Toronto’s real estate board reported similar peaks in August, with a 21 per cent jump from that same month in 2012. The Ontario capital’s average home price also rose 4.4 per cent to $518,145, compared to August, 2012.

“After last year’s plunge in response to tighter mortgage rules, home sales have stabilized near normal levels and prices are rising moderately in most regions – a near perfect soft landing with shades of taking flight again,” said Bank of Montreal’s Sal Guatieri (Globe and Mail).

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Just one day earlier, The Economist had called Canada’s housing market “bubbly” – which isn’t a complement – and found the country’s housing prices to be entirely “overvalued”.

The magazine said Canada’s home prices were 30 per cent overvalued compared to incomes, and a whopping 74 per cent overvalued compared to rentals.

In the top 11 countries/city states profiled, only Hong Kong had a more overvalued housing-to-rental margin, at 84 per cent. New Zealand’s came in just ahead (or behind?) Canada at 68 per cent.